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The Child and the River
The Child and the River | Henri Bosco
1 post | 1 read
A new translation of an evocative, Huckleberry Finn–esque French bestseller about a young farmboy, the river where he is forbidden to play, and the adventures that ensue when he disobeys his family’s wishes. The story of Henri Bosco’s The Child and the River is straightforward yet haunting: Pascalet, a boy growing up on a farm in France, is told he can play anywhere he likes—except by the river. Of course he dreams of going to the river, and one day he does. He falls asleep in a small boat tied to an old dock, then wakes up to find himself drifting . . . Onto an island where some gypsies are camping. There, he sees another young boy, perhaps also a gypsy, tied up and beaten. Stealthily, he frees him, and the two escape in a boat, then spend an idyllic—beautifully described—week living freely on the river. Eventually, Gatzo, the other child, is somewhat magically reunited with his family. Pascalet returns home, desperately missing his friend and the wild life they shared . . . Some time later, Gatzo, orphaned, appears at Pascalet’s doorstep: the two “brothers,” one light-skinned, the other darker, are reunited. (And that’s material for another story, as the narrator, the grown-up Pascalet, tells us.) A sort of French Huckleberry Finn, The Child and the River is also considered a “crossover” book, appealing as much to adults as to children. It has sold more than three million copies in France.
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Even if it hadn't explicitly mentioned it on the back cover, you can't help but think of Huckleberry Finn while reading this book - a young boy wanders off from home and travels downriver with a friend he's helped rescue from captivity, reveling in their freedom and the wonders of nature. It's no ripoff, though - this is a more stripped-down, elemental story, with a patina of magical realism that makes it feel almost like a fable or fairy tale.